I was invited on air for a half hour this morning to break down the Phoenix Suns and the Eric Gordon situation with Dr. Jason Calmes of Hornets247 on WGSO in New Orleans.
As you would expect, I gave...

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As we all expected - or at least most of us did - the Suns executed the inevitable today by withdrawing their qualifying offer from Aaron Brooks.

PHOENIX - The Phoenix Suns have withdrawn their qualifying offer to guard Aaron Brooks the club has announced. Brooks is now an unrestricted free agent.

The 2009-10 NBA Most Improved Player, Brooks was acquired by the Suns from the Houston Rockets at the 2011 trade deadline and appeared in 25 games with Phoenix, averaging 9.6 points and 4.2 assists in 18.9 minutes.

He likely won't be out of work next year, but with this move the Suns ensured he couldn't simply choose to return on a large one-year contract ($5.04 million) that the qualifying offer would have provided him.

Now with the Suns re-signing Goran Dragic and Brooks likely returning to Houston, we can pretend that the Suns gave the Rockets a first-round pick to give Dragic a chance to earn starters minutes he would never have earned here, and to mature into a full-blown NBA starter by the time Steve Nash left for other pastures. Right? Yeah, that's the ticket.

Late yesterday, New Orleans shooting guard Eric Gordon tossed a few more grenades in the direction of his team, his teammates and the front office. It is now clear he wasn't just using the Suns to negotiate a new deal to stay with the Hornets next season. While Roy Hibbert is getting a similar max offer from Portland without saying one bad thing about Indiana, Gordon is saying everything and anything he can to get the heck out of dodge the bayou. Not that all of it makes perfect sense, mind you, but he's trying to get the point across regardless.

Let's start out by saying that Eric Gordon felt extremely uncomfortable in this interview. He had backed up 10 feet from where we started by the time the interview ended.

On what made Phoenix a better fit than New Orleans- "The interest- I feel like im getting taken advantage of over there just because I'm restricted... if they wanted to.... you know how this CBA, this deal is, it's built for you to stay with your remaining team, but everything has been taken advantage of".

"If you look at it, we have no center, we have hardly no bigs, you never know. I'm at a point where I went to Phoenix, I talked to their organization and next thing you know they signed the players.

"You look at our roster right now, what do we have, one big? Jason Smith? Before Anthony Davis, we had no bigs.

"My thing is, if you're trying to be a good team, and you've got a young team, you've got to fill in spaces. I am the shooting guard. We've got plenty of point guards on our team right now."

He really, really didn't like that draft pick of Rivers, who incidentally DOES play the same position as the one real starting-quality player on that team. But really, a team needs to go for talent and every team needs 2 shooting guard, especially NBA-caliber ones who can get their own shot.

We Suns fans are spoiled by the attitudes of Steve Nash and every other player on the 2011-12 Suns team. Of course, the 2011-12 Suns team was much more competitive than the 2011-12 Hornets team, with a lot more maturity and overall talent. Coach Monty Williams drew blood from a stone with that group.

Yet Joe Johnson was really miffed in the summer of 2005, when he projected enough negativity to convince the Suns to trade him to the Hawks rather than match the max offer. While JJ didn't throw the Suns team under the bus, there was no opportunity for such. The Suns had just come off a 62-20 campaign and Western Conference Finals appearance!

But JJ did throw grenades toward team management about getting previous offers that were below what he felt was his market value. A year before, when the Suns were committing gobs of money to PG Steve Nash and SF Quentin Richardson, the Suns "lowballed" JJ with a 5-year, $45 million contract extension offer. I quote-mark the "lowball" because JJ was asking for $50, so the offer was only $1 million a year lower than he wanted. And this was 2004, when JJ was coming off a relatively unspectacular campaign for a 29-win team.

Gordon repeatedly said he felt the Hornets should have made a better offer than the reported four-year, $50 million contract the club wanted to give him in late January, while he was out with a right knee injury that two weeks later necessitated arthroscopic surgery.

On if he would he have taken the $58 million if it had been offered at the time: "Why not?"

So what's at the root of all this unrest for Gordon? Why is he so upset about all this, even though the Hornets have said all along that they want to keep him and would match any offer on the table to him, up to and including the max (4 years, $58 million)?

On why the Suns are the best fit- "The type of interest that they have as an organization. That's just point-blank."

On what made Phoenix a better fit than New Orleans- "The interest- I feel like im getting taken advantage of over there just because I'm restricted... if they wanted to.... you know how this CBA, this deal is, it's built for you to stay with your remaining team, but everything has been taken advantage of."

He feels lowballed, even to this day. He feels like the Hornets are trying to get away with paying him as little as possible to keep him under their control. And he's pissed off about it.

Frankly I get the idea that Gordon really wants to be wanted, and the Hornets missed the boat to some extent on making him feel that way. He said repeatedly "the interest isn't there." He said multiple times that Dell and Monty haven't spoken with him since the free agent period started. I get the feeling that if they had told him on day one and said that they were going to match any offer- that he was their guy- this could have been avoided. I don't mean in the media or on the phone, either. I mean one on one in Indiana, where he was when free agency started.

Apparently, GM Dell Demps was right in the building while all this was going on, yet he hadn't talked to Gordon personally yet? And, don't forget the Hornets had 6 months so far with Gordon, not just the last few days.

This is not going to end well for the Hornets if they match the Suns' contract offer. The Suns know this first-hand (at least, Robert Sarver does), and made the trade even after previously promising to match any offer. They tossed out the white flag, and in return took the Hawks' 3-string PG/SG and two protected first-round picks.

You just can't keep a guy on your squad that feels disrespected, no matter how petty or misplaced that feeling may be. He can be a cancer on a team that's building toward the future. Hornets coach Monty Williams is a good coach, and GM Dell Demps is not afraid to make tough decisions. Why have a cancer on that squad?

So the next question is: why the heck would the Suns want a team cancer like this?

The answer: all the players in the NBA just want to be wanted, and many of them don't mind trying to exercise some level of pressure on their team. JJ himself bitched and moaned his way out of Phoenix, yet hasn't said one negative thing about Atlanta since then and by all accounts has been a model citizen. JJ simply wanted to be "the man". He wanted to be wanted. Maybe that's all Eric Gordon needs.

We have four days until the offer sheet is presented by the Suns and signed by Gordon. If that happens, the Hornets only have 2 choices: (1) match it, and keep a highly-paid malcontent that might ruin your chemistry or (2) ignore it, and let Gordon go to Phoenix for nothing.

But that's four days from now. In the meantime, Hornets GM Dell Demps has to figure out where Gordon's head really is. If all Gordon really wants is some love and affection (and money to show for it), then Demps can have a nice long dinner with Gordon and talk it out man to man. Maybe even stroke Gordon's hand ego a little bit a lot.

If they leave that dinner on good terms, Demps can match the offer sheet and all is well in NOLA.

If they leave that dinner on bad terms, then Demps needs to get on the phone with Suns President of Basketball Operation Lon Babby and work out some compensation for letting Gordon go to Phoenix.

Maybe: still-young C Robin Lopez and two protected first-round picks (Suns' 2013 and the higher of Suns' and Lakers' 2015 picks, both top-10 protected with the protection dwindling each subsequent year).

Get 'er done, Lon and Dell!

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Update: apologies to Michael Schwartz at www.valleyofthesuns.com for posting this same trade suggestion yesterday and even coming to the same JJ/Gordon comparison. I swear I didn't read that article before writing mine. My proof is that Michael's article is much better, and so it stands to reason that I would not have made an inferior post intentionally. Plus, I don't make it a habit to steal others' editorial storylines without full attribution.